Fractal Fract, Vol. 9, Pages 655: Continuous Lower-Limb Joint Angle Prediction Under Body Weight-Supported Training Using AWDF Model Joint Angle Prediction Under Bodyweight-Supported Training Using AWDF Model


Fractal Fract, Vol. 9, Pages 655: Continuous Lower-Limb Joint Angle Prediction Under Body Weight-Supported Training Using AWDF Model Joint Angle Prediction Under Bodyweight-Supported Training Using AWDF Model

Fractal and Fractional doi: 10.3390/fractalfract9100655

Authors:
Li Jin
Liuyi Ling
Zhipeng Yu
Liyu Wei
Yiming Liu

Exoskeleton-assisted bodyweight support training (BWST) has demonstrated enhanced neurorehabilitation outcomes in which joint motion prediction serves as the critical foundation for adaptive human–machine interactive control. However, joint angle prediction under dynamic unloading conditions remains unexplored. This study introduces an adaptive wavelet-denoising fusion (AWDF) model to predict lower-limb joint angles during BWST. Utilizing a custom human-tracking bodyweight support system, time series data of surface electromyography (sEMG), and inertial measurement unit (IMU) from ten adults were collected across graded bodyweight support levels (BWSLs) ranging from 0% to 40%. Systematic comparative experiments evaluated joint angle prediction performance among five models: the sEMG-based model, kinematic fusion model, wavelet-enhanced fusion model, late fusion model, and the proposed AWDF model, tested across prediction time horizons of 30–150 ms and BWSL gradients. Experimental results demonstrate that increasing BWSLs prolonged gait cycle duration and modified muscle activation patterns, with a concomitant decrease in the fractal dimension of sEMG signals. Extended prediction time degraded joint angle estimation accuracy, with 90 ms identified as the optimal tradeoff between system latency and prediction advancement. Crucially, this study reveals an enhancement in prediction performance with increased BWSLs. The proposed AWDF model demonstrated robust cross-condition adaptability for hip and knee angle prediction, achieving average root mean square errors (RMSE) of 1.468° and 2.626°, Pearson correlation coefficients (CC) of 0.983 and 0.973, and adjusted R2 values of 0.992 and 0.986, respectively. This work establishes the first computational framework for BWSL-adaptive joint prediction, advancing human–machine interaction in exoskeleton-assisted neurorehabilitation.



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